The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Wednesday, October 2, 2013 - 7A Lexi Erwin: How unique became unstoppable By RYAN KRASNOO Daily Sports Writer Lexi Erwin is quirky. A senior and co-captain on the Michigan volleyball team, she spends most of her nights before bed absorbed in thoughts about what her life will be like in 10 years. Her imagination spirals into fantasies about playing profes- sionally in Europe or South Amer- ica, or touring the United States as an urban planner. Her biggest fear is divorce, despite the fact that her parents are still together and her insistence that she's far removed from marriage herself. She has her heart set on traveling to Greece because the main character in "The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants" goes to Greece, and Erwin hopes to go everywhere the movie character went. Erwin is a spaz. She says so her- self. She's deathly afraid of public speaking, and any attempt at sav- ing face is belied by her flushed cheeks. "It's not like the 'cute' blush," she says. "It's like the 'I'm a tomato.'" Her favorite quote is "The peo- ple who love to eat are always the best people," by Julia Child, Amer- ican chef and TV personality. In fact, Erwin considers a hidden talent of hers eating whatever her parents put on her plate wjen she was younger. She giggles, embar- rassed. "I guess it's not really a tal- ent," she says. "I'm not very cool." Erwin is gritty. The summer before her sophomore year of high school, she was on a jet ski for the first time. One of her friends sug- gested they drive fast and Erwin agreed. Shortly after picking up speed, her legs flew out and she fell off the back, hitting her head on the corner of the jet ski and breaking 11 bones in her face. She received 150 stitches above her eyebrow. Somehow, she wasn't concussed, and, miraculously, after colliding with the jet ski, she impacted the water so hard that the bones went back into place and prevented her from requiring plastic surgery. Had Erwin's head been turned a little more, doctors said, the jet ski would have hit her spine and she likely would not have sur- vived. She tells this story candidly and with a hint of excitement. "I think it's a really cool thing," she says. When asked if she's a badass, she doesn't hesitate. "Yeah," she deadpans. "Just a lit- tle." Individually, Erwin's attributes are as bizarre as they sound. They are a hodgepodge of seemingly random and unrelated traits, but collectively, they shape the back- ground of a bona fide star who's been doing things her own way since she first picked up a volley- ball. And her transformation from an inconsistent, unproductive sophomore back-row player to one of the nation's most lethal offen- sive weapons is one of the most Senior outside hitter Lexi Erwin went from inconsistent back-row player to one of the nation's most lethal offensive weapons, remarkable Michigan coach Mark Rosen has ever seen. With one final season in Ann Arbor, Erwin, idiosyncrasies and all, aims to for- ever etchher name into the annals of Michiganvolleyball. Spring, Texas is a town of roughly 50,000 people located 30 minutes due north of down- town Houston. The Erwins have called Spring home for the past 16 years after Lexi's father, Blane, uprooted his family from Boston. Biane, who had been working gru- eling hours for IBM, was raised to be a family man and decided to take a pay cut in order to spend more time with his wife and three daughters. A job opened in Texas, and he jumped at the opportunity. Lexi found volleyball at a young age and quickly climbed the Texas ranks. She made the second team for her club when she was 12, and as her dedication to the game increased, she became a highly touted high-school prospect. Erwin - whose parents are both 6-foot-t- sprouted four inches from 5-foot-9 to 6-foot-t between her freshman and sophomore years of high school. When she was 15, Erwin watched Stanford play for the first time and had her heart set on play- ing for the Cardinal. Her coach told her she mightbe good enough to play there and that she could be recruited. A lightbulb went off, and her desire to play at the colle- giate level intensified. Erwin ponders not having played volleyball, where she might have ended up without it. "I'd probably be in a hick [col- lege] town in Texas with my entire high school," Erwin says, laughing, attempting to cover her mouth as her"tomato face" sets in. "That sounds so bad. I needed vol- leyball to get out of there.", Michigan was not originally on Erwin's college list because she didn't want to attend a school where it snowed. Then one day, she received a personalized recruiting letter from the Wolverines' staff - a section of a puzzle that said, "You're the missing piece" with her name on it. "I thought it was so cool, and no expected. She enrolled in a "Reli- gion, Politics and Power" class her freshman year, and, coming from a conservative and Christian atmosphere back home in Texas, she was shellshocked by the class discussions. "It was the first time I'd ever heard of people really believing in evolution or people believing in. and often clashed with coaches and other authority figures. That spring, eager for a change, Erwin approached Rosen and told him she wanted to be one of the best outside hitters in the country. "We felt that Lexi had a really high top end but was underdevel- oped and overlooked," Rosen said. "I don't think I've ever had a play- er that has transformed herself as much as she has." The lights are bright at Cliff Keen Arena, and Erwin is strug- gling. No. 10 Michigan is hosting Maryland in the Michigan Invi- tational, and Erwin is out of sync. The timing on her jumps is off, her kill attempts ineffective. One of her shots is blocked easily and drops on Michigan's side for a Ter- rapins point. Erwin huddles with her team- mates and is not upset. In fact,. she's smiling,' almost laughing. She shakes her head, brushing off another missed opportunity. Teammate and junior setter Lexi Dannemiller gives Erwin a slight nod, indicating she will be look- ingto send the nextball in Erwin's direction. Dannemiller does, and Erwin fires an attempt cross- court that knifes through two Maryland players for a Michigan point. Erwin, a 2012 honorable men- tion All-American and 2013 pre- season All-Big Ten selection, is immensely talented. Her poor play that evening is uncharacter- istic but fixable, something she has been striving toward for near- ly two years. Erwin has been seei g Michi- gan's sports psychologist, Greg Harden, every other week since her sophomore year. Harden sug- gested Erwin write down all of the characteristics of the person she aspired tobe when she ultimately left Michigan -'a great volleyball player, but a better teammate, friend, and person. While her off-the-court goals are in a constant state of improve- ment, Harden has also helped Erwin shake her frustration on the court. Gone are the days of her brash and rigid volleyball person- ality. She plays with a rare loose- ness and thrives in - and needs, really - a relaxing, fun vibe. Erwin and her teammates often joke in the gym that playing vol- leyball is akin to the childhood game of keeping a balloon off the floor. "We're basically a bunch of 20-year-olds acting like we're 5 again," Erwin says. When Erwin finally allowed her play on the courtto mirror her character off it, things clicked. She drove that mentality to the tune of a school-record 614 kills last sea- son while pacing Michigan to its first-ever Final Four appearance. When the Wolverines entered the KFC Yum! Center in Lou- isville, Ky., last December, days ahead of their Final Four match- up with Texas, ESPN reporters swarmed the players. There were interviews and photo shoots - publicity rarely granted to non- revenue student athletes. The venue, home to Louisville basket- ball, seats 22,000 people, nearly 11 times the size of Cliff Keen Arena. All of a sudden, Erwin was thrust into the spotlight. One thousand people showed up to watch her practice. The attention consumed her, and anxiety reared its ugly head. Her same free approach that had led Michigan to that point, that had remained a constant when seemingly nothing else did that season, evaporated into a stoic, robotic-like effort which left Erwin uncomfortable and out of rhythm. The effects carried over from practice to the beginning of the Wolverines' match with the Long- horns, as Texas took the first set 25-12. Erwin retreated to the bench, with her familiar goofy smile reappearing, seemingly unfazed by the beating Texas had just delivered in the biggest match in Michigan volleyball history. "We were laughing," Erwin recalled. "We just got whooped, so badly, Someone made the com- ment that we made every single mistake you can make in a vol- leyball game so we might as well grow a pair and just play." Erwin thought of her conver- sations with Harden and relaxed. She settled in and nearly sparked an upset over the eventual nation- al champion Longhorns. Despite falling to Texas 3-2 and ending their magical run, the Wolver- ines rebounded, led by Erwin's 26 kills on a school-record 87 attack attempts. She responded, smile and all, and in an oddly poetic way, Erwin's performance reflected her ascent from Rosen's doghouse to All-Tournament accolades. "She's one of my all-time suc- cess stories in terms of someone I'm really proud of," Rosen says. Nine months have passed since Michigan's appearance in the Final Four, since the first time Erwin has - by her own admis- sion - really felt like a talented volleyball player. She's learned to handle pressure better than she ever thought she could. The atten- tion that comes with being great no longer corners her. She used to "black out" and not know what to do. Now, she's the one teammates turn to, and laugh with, in pivotal moments. After a recent practice, Erwin's thoughts stray off again like they do before bed. She rambles on, seemingly to no one in particu- lar, about the Kardashians and one of their latest exploits. She pauses,then chuckles, awkwardly. In a way, her off-beat remark is a sign she's enjoying herself. But in a truer sense, it's simply Erwin being Erwin, whoever she is. JAMES COLLER/aily Erwin grew up in Spring, Texas, and the move to Ann Arbor was an adjustment. like that," Erwin said. "I had to visit." In January of her junior year of high school, Erwin visited Ann Arbor and fell in love. She initially had her heart set on Long Beach State, but Rosen had given Erwin tickets to a Michigan hockey game and she was sold. Erwin was not No. 1 on Michigan's target list, though, and it wasn't until anoth- er recruit fell through that Erwin was able to commit. The transition from the south to progressive Ann Arbor was more drastic than Erwin had ing their opinions," Erwin says. "I remember calling my mom and saying, 'They said this in class, I can't believe it.'" The leap from high school to college athletics wasn't easy either. Erwin started just two matches during her freshman season, and as a sophomore she was in and out of the front row. The coaches were concerned she wasn't physically capable or con- sistent enough to play at the net in front of the Big Ten elite. She struggled, additionally, through a self-described rebellious phase MRn CROSS COnNwRY Runner Smoragiewicz can bike and swim too By REBECCA DZOMBAK For The Daily For most people, making the Michigan men's cross country team would be enough to sate their athletic desire. But for sophomore runner and interna- tionally ranked triathlete Tony Smoragiewicz, running is only a third of what's on his plate. Smoragiewicz started com- peting at an early age; he was in the pool by the tender age of 8 and entering triathlons by 12. His interest in swimming was sparked by his father, who swam in college for Maine. Training through his teen- age years landed Smoragiewicz in Beijing in 2011, racing against fellow up-and-coming triathletes in the International Triathlon Union Junior World Triathlon Championships, where he took the bronze. He followed that per- formance, placing 34th in 2012, and this September, by placing 42nd. The ITU Junior-level race is a sprint-distance triathlon, which comprises a 750-meter swim, a 20-kilometer bike ride, and a 5,000-meter run. Smoragiewicz believes the drop in his performance in tri- athlons is due to a combination of the increased demands of college life - both running and academ- ics - and the fact that the compe- tition has gotten tougher. "Last year was a hard transi- tion, going into school - start- ing at college, being away from home, being in a new training atmosphere," Smoragiewicz said. "This year, I feel like my training is going really well. I know I had a really good fitness level and that I was prepared for the race, it just didn't go very well. So that was frustrating, but it was good moti- vation for cross country this fall." Balancing running, cross- training in two other sports and academics is no easy task, but Smoragiewicz thinks that he has a better feel for how to handle everything this year. It helps that Michigan coach Alex Gibby and the rest of his teammates are supportive of his triathlon goals. The other colleges recruiting him wouldn't have allowed him to compete in triathlons, which was the main reason he chose Michigan. "Any time you're competing at the highest level, in any dis- cipline, that's to be respected," Gibby told MGoBlue.com on Sept. 30. "He's had a hard go of it because he really has his feet in two different worlds. He's trying to compete at a world-class level in the triathlon in the summers and develop as a national-class distance runner through the other nine months of the year. It's a tough balancing act, but I think it's one he's handled with consid- erable maturity." Smoragiewicz's training focuses primarily on running during the school year, which makes sense, as he's an excellent runner. His best race last year was at the Big Ten meet, where he placed 16th. He continues tc swim and bike; his teammates even venture into the water every once in a while to work out witl him. Although triathlons have grown to be highly competitive and draw deep international fields, the NCAA does not recog- nize the triathlon as an official sport. Instead, Smoragiewic2 occasionally trains with the Tri- athlon Club on campus. He's OK with this arrangement, since running cross country and racing triathlons - both at high levels of competition - at the same time would be exceedingly difficult. Smoragiewicz's aspirations don't end there. "I'll probably do (an Ironman) once I'm older," Smoragiewicz said. "But for now I'm going tc focus on transitioning to 'the Olympic distance, since I'm mov- ing out of the junior level. Later though, an Ironman would be fun. Grueling, but fun ... mainly grueling." & A ' .